Knowing how to understand and properly use the data your business produces is critical for company growth and longevity, especially for companies striving toward digital transformation.
Search Results: digital transformation (1360)
Microsoft Cloud and AI Executive VP Scott Guthrie offers detailed insight on how they intend to retain the top spot among cloud vendors.
For cloud vendors, the battle for supremacy in industry-specific clouds will be the most intense due to the massive future revenue potential.
The day we thought would never arrive —the end of 2020!!— is here and I’d like to share my choices for the Top 10 Cloud Wars stories of 2020.
Honeywell looks to use its 114 years of industrial and process-control expertise to build the world’s premiere industrial-software company.
We spoke with David Trice, Honeywell Forge Chief Product Officer and General Manager Connected Buildings, in a Cloud Wars Live Perspectives.
On the Cloud Wars Live podcast, Pat Fitzgerland and I discuss the latest in talent acquisition, inlcuding the impact of working from home.
Ready to turn its dreams of transcending traditional ERP into reality, SAP to bring the full promise of the Intelligent Enterprise in 2021.
On the Cloud Wars Live podcast, Bonnie Tinder describes the resources and team members needed to build a project dream team.
Microsoft will face intensified pressure to hold the #1 spot in 2021 from Google, Amazon, and a few of the world’s other top cloud vendors.
In a classic reflection of their decades-long rivalry, both SAP and Oracle claim they will lead the industry-specific solutions market.
Walmart, Accenture, UPS and GE all went live on Workday HCM in Q3, with those 4 companies representing almost 3 million new users.
Thomas Kurian raised the specter that proprietary clouds won’t meet the “survivability requirements” of today’s hybrid and multicloud world.
Going head-on against Google Cloud and SAP, Oracle plans to roll out a broad set of industry-specific cloud solutions.
The three vendors whose cloud revenue is growing most rapidly are Google at 44.8%, Oracle 33% (estimated), and Microsoft 31%.
Guest author Jiri Kram explores what Larry Ellison’s unexpected frontal attack on Salesforce could mean for AWS.
In a CX event earlier this week, Oracle Chairman Larry Ellison made two striking disclosures about Oracle’s growing relationship with Zoom.
By spanning both IaaS and SaaS layers of the cloud, Larry Ellison feels Oracle will offer unique value to business customers.
On the Cloud Wars Live podcast, Pat Fitzgerland and I discuss how companies are defaulting too quickly to technology.
If Google’s founders have a secret list of “best hires we’ve ever made,” I would bet Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian is near or at the top.



















